Harlem Shuffle

by

Colson Whitehead

Biz Dixon Character Analysis

Biz Dixon is a drug dealer who grew up alongside Carney and Freddie in Harlem. Carney has Pepper gather information on Dixon, which he later trades to Detective Munson. Though Carney worries that Freddie’s friendship with Dixon will get him into trouble, in reality it is Carney’s deal with Munson that leads to Freddie’s arrest.

Biz Dixon Quotes in Harlem Shuffle

The Harlem Shuffle quotes below are all either spoken by Biz Dixon or refer to Biz Dixon. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Crime, Class, and Social Mobility Theme Icon
).
Part 2, Chapter 2 Quotes

“You’re reading too many papers,” Freddie said. “Does he try to make a buck? He doesn’t try to hide anything. Put on a costume, like you. Suit and tie every day, pretty wife and kids, trying to hide shit. He’s out there trying to run a hustle the same as you.”

Related Characters: Freddie (speaker), Raymond Carney, Aunt Millie, Biz Dixon
Related Symbols: Furniture Store
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 4 Quotes

“It’s like this,” Munson said. “There is a circulation, a movement of envelopes that keeps the city running. Mr. Jones, he operates a business, he has to spread the love, give an envelope to this person, another person, somebody at the precinct, another place, so everybody gets a taste. Everybody’s kicking back or kicking up. Unless you’re on top. Low men like us, we don’t have to worry about that. Then there’s Mr. Smith, who also runs a business, and he’s doing the same thing if he is a wise and learned soul and wants to stick around. Spreading the love. The movement of the envelopes. Who is to say which man is more important, Mr. Jones or Mr. Smith? To whom do we give our allegiance? Do we judge a man by the weight of the envelope—or whom he gives it to?”

Related Characters: Detective Munson (speaker), Raymond Carney, Biz Dixon, Cheap Brucie
Related Symbols: Furniture Store
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 6 Quotes

Following his targets back-to-back, the banker and the peddler, Pepper had to say they were in the same business. There were obvious junkies in Harlem, swaying, grooving to some inner refrain, and then there were citizens you’d never know were on junk. Normal people with straight jobs who strolled up to Dixon’s men, copped, then split to their warrens. Then there was Duke. Every day Duke hustled, doing his own handoffs in restaurants and club rooms, pushing that inside dope: influence, information, power. You couldn’t tell who was using what these days, their drug of choice, but half the city was on something if you had your eyes open.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Pepper, Wilfred Duke, Biz Dixon
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 7 Quotes

In the coming days, he tried to determine when the Duke job actually got underway. Did it begin with the arrest of the drug dealer, that endgame maneuver? With the return of dorvay, and Carney’s nocturnal scheming all those summer nights, or the day the banker committed an offense that called for payback? Or had it been summoned from their natures, deep in their makeup? Duke’s corruption. The Carney clan’s worship of grudges. If you believed in the holy circulation of envelopes, everything that went down happened because a man took an envelope and didn’t do his job. An envelope is an envelope. Disrespect the order and the whole system breaks down.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Big Mike Carney, Wilfred Duke, Biz Dixon, Miss Laura
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Harlem Shuffle LitChart as a printable PDF.
Harlem Shuffle PDF

Biz Dixon Quotes in Harlem Shuffle

The Harlem Shuffle quotes below are all either spoken by Biz Dixon or refer to Biz Dixon. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Crime, Class, and Social Mobility Theme Icon
).
Part 2, Chapter 2 Quotes

“You’re reading too many papers,” Freddie said. “Does he try to make a buck? He doesn’t try to hide anything. Put on a costume, like you. Suit and tie every day, pretty wife and kids, trying to hide shit. He’s out there trying to run a hustle the same as you.”

Related Characters: Freddie (speaker), Raymond Carney, Aunt Millie, Biz Dixon
Related Symbols: Furniture Store
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 4 Quotes

“It’s like this,” Munson said. “There is a circulation, a movement of envelopes that keeps the city running. Mr. Jones, he operates a business, he has to spread the love, give an envelope to this person, another person, somebody at the precinct, another place, so everybody gets a taste. Everybody’s kicking back or kicking up. Unless you’re on top. Low men like us, we don’t have to worry about that. Then there’s Mr. Smith, who also runs a business, and he’s doing the same thing if he is a wise and learned soul and wants to stick around. Spreading the love. The movement of the envelopes. Who is to say which man is more important, Mr. Jones or Mr. Smith? To whom do we give our allegiance? Do we judge a man by the weight of the envelope—or whom he gives it to?”

Related Characters: Detective Munson (speaker), Raymond Carney, Biz Dixon, Cheap Brucie
Related Symbols: Furniture Store
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 6 Quotes

Following his targets back-to-back, the banker and the peddler, Pepper had to say they were in the same business. There were obvious junkies in Harlem, swaying, grooving to some inner refrain, and then there were citizens you’d never know were on junk. Normal people with straight jobs who strolled up to Dixon’s men, copped, then split to their warrens. Then there was Duke. Every day Duke hustled, doing his own handoffs in restaurants and club rooms, pushing that inside dope: influence, information, power. You couldn’t tell who was using what these days, their drug of choice, but half the city was on something if you had your eyes open.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Pepper, Wilfred Duke, Biz Dixon
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 7 Quotes

In the coming days, he tried to determine when the Duke job actually got underway. Did it begin with the arrest of the drug dealer, that endgame maneuver? With the return of dorvay, and Carney’s nocturnal scheming all those summer nights, or the day the banker committed an offense that called for payback? Or had it been summoned from their natures, deep in their makeup? Duke’s corruption. The Carney clan’s worship of grudges. If you believed in the holy circulation of envelopes, everything that went down happened because a man took an envelope and didn’t do his job. An envelope is an envelope. Disrespect the order and the whole system breaks down.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Big Mike Carney, Wilfred Duke, Biz Dixon, Miss Laura
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis: